This is a book about how the American economy should be structured IF every economic actor thought and acted exactly like Milton Friedman. If we assume, in other words, that every American is a greedy little number cruncher with no bias or sentimentality and with all the time in the world to agonize over the smallest differences in price, then this book should be an excellent prescription of how the American economy should be structured; If we cannot make that assumption, then the plan layed out in this book is completely worthless.
Incidentally, you could make the same point about the Communist Manifesto. How easy it would be to structure an economy if everyone thought and acted exactly the same!
Additionally, in Chapter 10, the chapter on wealth distribution, Friedman claims that the goal of anti-capitalists is complete income equality —something that I've never heard any person over the age of 7 ever advocate for— and then bases the entire chapter on that premise. Friedman also makes some pretty dubious assertions about the ethics of desegregation, and recommends that licenses should not be required to practice medicine, so all in all, it's a pretty horseshit book that I recommend you read if you want to understand the
Not very insightful, but there were fewer, or no weirdly political non sequiturs than in the last one. Less of a manifesto, more of a self help book, so if you're looking for that, knock yourself out.
This is a pretty insightful collection of essays on American right-wing subcultures. That said, its tone is exceedingly literary, bordering on poetic, which means if you're looking for a concrete study of the American far right, this might not be the best. The political perspective is also firmly rad-lib. The author includes land acknowledgments to establish the setting of the essays, for example.
Altogether a pretty good book.